FDR mistakenly taped candid conversations which took place in the White House in the months before the 1940 election. The incident is analysed by historian Robert J.C. Butow in his article for the February 1982 American Heritage, entitled "The FDR Tapes".

President Roosevelt is shown painting on a fence the words "The Monroe Doctrine Must Be Recognized," as European leaders look over their own fence ahead of ships sailing with various European flags in their rigging.

The Russian foreign office has refused to accept a petition on behalf of Russian Jews forwarded by President Roosevelt. The foreign office considers it a domestic matter and compared the situation to the United States accepting an anti-lynching petition.

In this editorial, Theodore Roosevelt examines the abrogation of the international agreement by the U.S. Congress and its relation to America's greater foreign policy. Roosevelt reflects on the responsibilities of American leadership and the Monroe Doctrine in his examination.

Illustration shows a Frenchman standing outside the U.S. Treasury building, he is holding in one hand a newspaper that states "Colombia Rejects Canal Treaty" and in the other hand a paper labeled "40,000,000 for France if Treaty is Ratified". It appears that he was about to ca...

Illustration shows a large group of representatives from several nations, many carrying weapons and making threatening gestures to others, arriving outside the "Palace of Peace" for the peace conference to end the Russo-Japanese War. Andrew Carnegie is posting a notice on the side of th...